North Korea missile launch 'narrowly missed' civilian flight

South Korean officials believe the recent series of launches were in part an effort to test 300-mm multiple rocket launchers

Rockets are launched from a K-136 multiple launch rocket system during a live-fire training exercise at a coast near the demilitarized zone (DMZ) which separates the two Koreas in Goseong, about 330 km (205 miles) northeast of SeoulPhoto: YONHAP/REUTERS

AP

5:29AM GMT 06 Mar 2014

South Korean officials have criticized a North Korean artillery launch that they say happened minutes before a Chinese commercial plane reportedly carrying 202 people flew in the same area.

It wasn't immediately clear what danger, if any, the launch posed to the China Southern Airlines plane travelling from Tokyo to Shenyang, China, but Seoul Defence Ministry spokesman Kim Min-seok called it a "serious threat" that Pyongyang failed to notify international aviation authorities of its launch plans in the area.

Kim said the plane was traveling at an altitude of 10 kilometers (6 miles), while the projectile's peak altitude was 20 kilometers (12 miles). He said the flight passed through the area about five minutes after the projectile hit the water.

An unidentified North Korean army spokesman said in a statement that rocket drills conducted from Feb. 21 until Tuesday were part of regular training. He said that neither regional security nor the international navigation were in danger because the North took "scrupulous advance security measures for flight orbit and targets in the designated waters."

Asked about the incident, a Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman called for all sides to continue improving relations and to refrain from provocations.

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Seoul officials say the suspected artillery launch on Tuesday and others that included Scud missiles in previous days were protests of ongoing US-South Korean military drills that Pyongyang considers invasion preparation. Washington and Seoul say the drills, which prompted threats of nuclear war from the North a year ago, are defensive in nature and meant to deter North Korean aggression.

It was not immediately clear what kind of artillery the North launched. But South Korean officials believe the recent series of launches were in part an effort to test 300-mm multiple rocket launchers, according to the South's Chosun Ilbo. If fired from near the demilitarized zone separating the rival Koreas, the newspaper reported, such rockets could reach the headquarters of the South Korean army, navy and air force.

Despite the recent firings and launches, outside analysts say the North is taking a softer stance toward the US-South Korean military drills this year than last year because it wants better ties with the outside world to revive its struggling economy.